People v. Morgan

2024 NY Slip Op 04165
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedAugust 8, 2024
Docket113481
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 04165 (People v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Morgan, 2024 NY Slip Op 04165 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

People v Morgan (2024 NY Slip Op 04165)
People v Morgan
2024 NY Slip Op 04165
Decided on August 8, 2024
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:August 8, 2024

113481

[*1]The People of the State of New York, Respondent,

v

Arthur H. Morgan Jr., Appellant.


Calendar Date:March 28, 2024
Before:Garry, P.J., Egan Jr., Fisher, McShan and Powers, JJ.

Steven M. Sharp, Albany, for appellant.

Christopher Liberati-Conant, District Attorney, Hudson, for respondent.



Egan Jr., J.

Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Columbia County (Richard M. Koweek, J.), rendered March 31, 2022, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of manslaughter in the first degree.

Defendant and his wife (hereinafter the victim) resided together in a trailer home in the Town of Claverack, Columbia County. The victim was last seen alive in March 2008 and, on April 9, 2008, her body was found wrapped in a blanket underneath the couple's home. Defendant was charged in an indictment with murder in the second degree, and a jury trial ended with him being convicted as charged. Upon appeal from the judgment and an order denying defendant's CPL article 440 motion, we found that the verdict was supported by the trial evidence, but that reversal and a new trial was required because defendant had been deprived of his right to testify in his own defense (149 AD3d 1148 [3d Dept 2017]). At the conclusion of that second trial, the jury convicted defendant of manslaughter in the first degree. County Court sentenced defendant to 25 years in prison to be followed by five years of postrelease supervision. Defendant appeals.

We affirm. Pointing to the absence of proof establishing the victim's cause of death and purported inconsistencies in witness testimony, defendant contends that his conviction is not supported by legally sufficient evidence and is against the weight of the evidence. "When assessing the legal sufficiency of a jury verdict, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the People and examine whether there is a valid line of reasoning and permissible inferences from which a rational jury could have found the elements of the crime proved beyond a reasonable doubt" (People v Bridges, 220 AD3d 1107, 1108 [3d Dept 2023] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted], lv denied 40 NY3d 1091 [2024]). "[W]hen conducting a weight of the evidence review, we must view the evidence in a neutral light and determine first whether a different verdict would have been unreasonable and, if not, weigh the relative probative force of conflicting testimony and the relative strength of conflicting inferences that may be drawn from the testimony to determine if the verdict is supported by the weight of the evidence" (People v Jenkins, 215 AD3d 1118, 1119 [3d Dept 2023] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted], lv denied 40 NY3d 997 [2023]). "[W]e do not distinguish between direct or circumstantial evidence in conducting a legal sufficiency and/or weight of the evidence review" (People v Bridges, 220 AD3d at 1108 [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]). As relevant here, "[a] person is guilty of manslaughter in the first degree when . . . [w]ith intent to cause serious physical injury to another person, he [or she] causes the death of such person" (Penal Law § 125.20 [1]).

There is no dispute that the victim's body was found wrapped in a blanket underneath the trailer home she shared with defendant and that her cause of death was [*2]undetermined. The questions were how she died, who put her body under the mobile home and why, and the People attempted to prove that defendant had stashed her body there after killing her. In that regard, the trial evidence included the testimony of multiple witnesses who described how they had seen defendant commit acts of domestic violence against the victim in the years leading up to 2008, including one who watched defendant choke the victim and threaten to kill her and "bury her body where no one would find it." The trial evidence further reflected that defendant had learned that the victim was having an extramarital affair in the weeks before her death, and one individual described how defendant promised that he was going to "take care" of the victim after learning of the affair in March 2008. Another individual described how defendant had asked him whether "the cops [would] come looking for him" if the victim did not show up for a scheduled court appearance and "they didn't find her body." Most damning, however, was testimony from defendant's brother regarding conversations between the two men in which defendant stated that "[e]verything is just fine now" after the victim had disappeared and how "it had to go the way it did" after her body was found. Defendant's brother further described how defendant later acknowledged that he had placed the victim's body under the trailer home because he did not have a vehicle and could not dispose of the body in the way he had planned.

There was, in other words, significant proof reflecting that defendant had been violent toward the victim in the past and that he intended to, at a minimum, seriously harm her after learning of her affair. Other evidence corroborated the testimony suggesting that he had followed through on those plans and that the victim died as a result, including the presence of scratch marks on defendant's face and hand that investigators observed after the victim's disappearance, the presence of bloodstains inside the mobile home, and the recovery of fibers from the blanket in which the victim was found on the exterior rear stairs of the trailer home. After defendant was arrested, the victim's driver's license, Social Security card and health insurance card were found to be in his possession; meanwhile, his DNA was identified in material recovered from underneath her fingernails. Moreover, while Jeffrey Hubbard, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on the victim, could not identify the cause of her death with reasonable certainty, he made clear that he had also found no natural reason for her death and that certain causes of death, such as asphyxiation by suffocation or smothering, would not be detectable in an autopsy. The forensic pathologist further confirmed that, while the presence of a byproduct of cocaine in the victim's blood suggested that she had used cocaine sometime before her death, the levels of that substance were too low to point to cocaine toxicity as the [*3]cause of her death.

When viewed in the light most favorable to the People, we have no difficulty concluding that the foregoing evidence is legally sufficient to support the conviction of manslaughter in the first degree (see Penal Law § 125.20 [1]; People v Bridges, 220 AD3d at 1111; People v Beckingham, 57 AD3d 1098, 1099 [3d Dept 2008], lv denied 13 NY3d 742 [2009]).

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2024 NY Slip Op 04165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morgan-nyappdiv-2024.